Acknowledgements
List of Illustrations
Introduction
1 Representation, occupation, and Dutch war films
Representing the past: the case of film
Nationhood and identity
Myth and memory: the re-writing of history
The Netherlands and World War Two: German occupation
Post-war considerations
Dutch film history: an overview
Dutch war films: historical and cultural perspectives
2 The image of the enemy
Who is the enemy?
The end of forgetting: image of the enemy in the early 1960s
After the absence: war again on the agenda
Growing ambiguity: portrayal of the occupiers in 1986
3 Dutch identity and 'Dutchness'
Big skies, far horizons: Dutchness in early 1960s films
Speaking the same language?: Blurred boundaries in 1977
Bitter cold, fading Communism: portrayals from the 1980s
The legacy of the Dutch landscape, in painting, and in film
4 Life under occupation
We're all in this together: images of family life in 1960s films
Division, suspicion, and the war against Dutch Jews
Fractured lives, crushed hopes: trauma and the disintegration of family and friends in the 1980s
5 Resistance and collaboration
Irresistible resistance: heroic resistance in the 1960s
Pushing the boundaries: collaboration breaks through, 1977-1978
Shattered myths, bleak truths: assimilating collaboration and resistance in the 1980s and beyond
Conclusion
Filmography
Bibliography
Glossary of Dutch and German terms
Appendix Top Dutch films by box office admissions